A government shutdown is looming as Congress attempts to agree on a funding strategy by the end of the month. The countdown to Election Day is on and the race has intensified after this week’s
The second presidential debate of the 2024 election, but the first between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris, is tonight on ABC. Here's how to watch.
After a poor showing in Tuesday night’s ABC News presidential debate, Republican nominee Donald Trump said Thursday in a post to his social media platform he will not participate in any more debates with Democratic candidate Vice President Kamala Harris before the Nov.
If you’re one of the many Americans already worn out by the presidential election, here’s a bit of unsettling news: Tonight’s debate doesn’t signal that we’re near the end of the campaign, as it has in the past.
Democrats in Washington — flying high after Vice President Harris’s sharp debate performance this week — are also forcing themselves back to earth in the face of a stark political reality: The race for the White House is still neck-and-neck,
Voters will officially head to the polls just over a month later on Nov. 5 for Election Day, though early voting starts significantly earlier in many states. In Illinois, early voting will begin on Sept. 26 and will run through Nov. 4, with Election Day voting held at a designated polling place from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Nov. 5.
Kamala Harris and Donald Trump have agreed to face off for the first time in a live TV debate ahead of the US election.
The latest news and live updates on the 2024 election. Follow the Trump-Vance and Harris-Walz campaigns as the presidential candidates attend 9/11 services ahead of the November election.
Students gathered at the ASLC's theater to attend a live watch party for the first presidential debate between Harris and Trump.
Donald Trump beat Kamala Harris in a virtual coin toss before their presidential debate – but that’s about all he won.
Observers have largely pointed to Harris as the winner of what could be the final presidential debate before the election. This partly came down to how, rather than responding directly to Trump’s arguments, Harris inspired “a level of ridicule in the audience,” Jerusalem Demsas said last night on Washington Week With The Atlantic.